Healthy older observers show equivalent perceptual-cognitive training benefits to young adults for multiple object tracking

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Aging

June 2013

in

Frontiers in Psychology

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Aim

To investigate if the typically declining perceptual-cognitive abilities of healthy older people can be improved with NeuroTracker training.

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Method

20 younger adults (mean age 27 years old) and 20 older adults (mean age 66 years old) completed 3-hours of NeuroTracker training distributed over 3 weeks.

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Result

Although older adults had significantly lower NeuroTracker scores than older adults, they demonstrated a strong learning response to the training, equivalent to their younger peers. By the end of the training program the older adults closely matched the initial baseline performance of younger adults. Although the results demonstrate a decline in perceptual-cognitive functions from healthy aging, the results suggest this decline can be quickly reversed with a short training intervention.

Isolated learning rate comparison between younger and older adults.

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